department of sociology newsletter...and discover more about sociology, as well as other related...
TRANSCRIPT
Dear Students:
To those of you returning, welcome back,
and to our new students joining us, welcome
to the fields of Sociology, Criminology and
Dispute Resolution, all in one department at
John Jay!
I hope your studies are
going well this year. Our
Sociology Department
Newsletter highlights
many of the activities
and accomplishments of
our students and faculty.
We hope you enjoy read-
ing it, and that it leads you to inquire, learn,
and discover more about sociology, as well
as other related areas of study. In the follow-
ing pages you'll find interesting stories
about our past and planned events, students
and faculty, awards, ongoing research, and
more.
Our second International Sociology Honor
Society Induction Ceremony, will be held
this April. Our Dept. Student-Faculty Town
Hall was held in February, and ideas and ad-
vice were exchanged over pizza and snacks.
We have two superb speakers this spring inour Sociology Talks Series, former NYS
prosecutor Malcolm Bell and Professor
Colleen Eren. Professor Jan Yager has
continued to offer professional skills
building workshops that are attracting an
increasing number of students. Watch for
future announcements so that you can sign
up, as space is limited. We are also excited
about hiring two new full-time faculty,
Rochelle Arms and Liza
Steele, who will be joining us
next fall. The Department is
also looking forward to our
end-of-year Award Celebra-
tion, which honors our excel-
lent adjunct faculty and stu-
dents and will be held in May.
Again, welcome back, I wish
you all the best for continued success in your
studies, and to those of you who are graduat-
ing this year, CONGRATULATIONS!
Henry N. Pontell
Distinguished Professor
Chair's Welcome
SPRING 2018,
Number 3 Volume 3
Editors: Alisa Thomas
Precious Subtyl
DEPARTMENT OF SOCIOLOGY NEWSLETTER
Professor Richard Lovely Professor Crystal Jackson
Professor Jackson used the Faculty Student
Engagement fund to take ten students from
SOC 243, Sociology of Sexualities, to lunch
in the Faculty Dining Hall in Fall 2017.
She also gave three research talks over win-
ter break based on survey data of "porn su-
per-fans" who travel to Las Vegas each year,
and her analyses were presented at the same
event, The Adult Entertainment Expo. She
also gave talks to colleagues at the Universi-
ty of California, Santa Barbara and the Uni-
versity of California, Los Angeles. Prelimi-
nary findings challenge stereotypes of male
porn consumers as sexist and misogynistic
by comparing their answers to national find-
ings from the General Social Survey
on gender egalitarianism.
Image
or text box
with
text wrapping
The Sociology Department of John Jay College has a distinguished faculty of inter-
nationally known scholars in sociology, criminology, dispute resolution, and related are-
as and offers outstanding academic programs and opportunities for learning, service,
and research. The department’s wide array of foundational specialized, and interdisci-
plinary courses encourage students to develop a broad sociological understanding of the
nature and structure of society and its institutions.
BSidesNYC 2018, a cyber security conference, was held at John Jay on January 20, 2018. The event was hosted by Professor Richard Lovely on behalf of John Jay’s Digital Forensics and Cyber security graduate program (D4CS). Pro-fessor Lovely, the co-founder of D4CS, opened the conference with remarks to set the stage and welcome visitors to the college. BSides is a loosely organized national web of volunteers who locally organize and run unique free cyber security conferences in cities around the U.S. as a counterpoint to expensive commercially run conferences. This was the second BSides NYC conference hosted by Professor Lovely and D4CS. A mix of over 600 cyber security profes-sionals and graduate students attended who hailed mostly from the New York region. They enjoyed three venues of presentations in the New Building and some “village” workshops on topics such as lock-picking, soldering, and NYC Mesh community Wi-Fi. You can view streams of the BSides program and Professor Lovely’s opening remarks at https://bsidesnyc.org
Faculty Highlights
Training
For the last two summers, Maria Volpe has as-
sumed a leadership role in a partnership with
Mediators Beyond Borders International – New
York Regional Group and the Union Of Liberian
Associations (ULAA) in the Americas to pro-
vide conflict resolution skills to ULAA leaders
in the NYC and nearby states. Participants
gained knowledge and skills they aspired to use
in their diaspora communities and in managing
post-conflict divisions in Liberia.
Conflict Resolution and Mediation Workshop,
Center for Employment Opportunities, Aug
2017
Basic Mediation Skills Training for
Peer Specialists, with Dan Berstein
of MH Mediate, 5 days, funded by
AAA-ICDR Foundation, John Jay
College, Aug 2017.
Grants and Awards
The New York State Council on Di-
vorce Mediation awarded Profes-
sor Maria Volpe their Lifetime
Achievement Award at its annual conference in
May. She was recognized for her leadership in
the mediation field.
In July, the NYS Office of Mental Health Anti-
Stigma Fund awarded Maria Volpe and Dan
Berstein of MH Mediate a grant to combat stig-
ma towards mental health in both mainstream
and social media. This project creates and dis-
seminates a web-based toolkit that helps users
have empowering conversations about mental
health. This project furthers the work that Ma-
ria and Dan have been undertaking since last
year that was funded by the AAA-ICDR Foun-
dation.
Previous Presentations
Academia and Accessing Academic Resources at A
Mediation Career: Getting Started, Dec 7, 2017.
Panelist, Local to Global to Local. 2017 Jed D.
Melnick Symposium, Persistent Human Divides:
Creative Initiatives for Communication, Collabora-
tion, and Cohesion, Cardozo Law School, NYC, Nov
13, 2017
Invited Presenter, Diversity and Inclusion in Dis-
pute Resolution, Mediation Settlement Day, New
York Law School, October 18, 2017.
Invited Presenter, Addressing Mediation’s Elusive-
ness. Annual Conference, Center for Alternative
Dispute Resolution, Greenbelt, Mary-
land, June 16, 2017.
Invited Presenter, Constructive Ap-
proaches to Conflict Resolution, Sup-
portive Housing of New York, NYC,
June 1, 2017.
Invited Presenter, Police Mediation,
International Visitor Leadership Pro-
gram from the Sahel [Niger, Mali,
Mauritania, Burkina Faso]. Countering Violent Ex-
tremism. US Department of State, Office of Inter-
national Visitors, October 19, 2017.
Conflict Resolution Workshop for Hip Hop Artists
from Algeria, Brazil, Colombia, Croatia, Indonesia,
and Tunisa, part of a US State Department cultural
diplomacy program called Next Level hosted by the
University of North Carolina’s Department of Mu-
sic and the US Department of State’s Bureau of Ed-
ucational and Cultural Affairs, June 30, 2017
Invited Presenter, Cultivating Interfaith Dialogue
on Campus. US Department of State and the Bu-
reau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, the Study
of the US Institute on US Culture and Society. Mul-
tinational Institute of American Studies at New
York University, June 14, 2017.
Professor Maria Volpe
Professor Rosemary Barberet
The Sociology Department has been home to
the Sage Journal, Feminist Criminology
(The official journal of The Division on Women
and Crime of the American Society of Criminol-
ogy) for the past four years. Professor Rose-
mary Barberet (editor) and managing editor,
Diana Rodriguez-Spahia celebrate the numer-
ous milestones the journal has achieved under
their term at their last editorial board meeting
held at the American Society of Criminology. In
the tradition of John Jay College of Criminal
Justice, Feminist Criminology has taken an
interdisciplinary and international approach to
the understanding the nexus of women and
crime.
Professor Rosemary Barberet received the
Saltzman Award for Contributions to Practice
and the Sarah Hall Award for Service Contribu-
tions from the Division on Women and Crime at
the American Society of Criminology Meetings
in Philadelphia last November. The Saltzman
Award recognizes criminologists whose research
and work significantly contribute to the quality
of justice and safety of women. The Sarah Hall
Award recognizes scholarship and contributions
to the Division on Women and Crime in addi-
tion to other professional interests in the field of
feminist criminology.
Professor Diana Rodriguez-Spahia
Professor Garot
attended a visual
and filmic sociolo-
gy conference in
Paris in March,
2017 and present-
ed a paper con-
trasting the expe-
rience of negotiat-
ing over content
when creating
film versus writ-
ing an ethnogra-
phy. He showed
two short documentaries there. He is also
collaborating with colleagues in Europe on
various projects and papers.
Inmates he works with at Sing Sing Prison in-
vited him to speak at their annual Peace Day
event in October, which commemorates the
murder of a former inmate, and a yearly pledge
since then of nonviolence. He talked about his
work with youth in South Central Los Angeles
in the 1990’s, many of whom were in-
volved with gangs, and how they learned to
walk away from fights and to avoid violence.
Professor Robert Garot
Amy’s book, Cross-
National Public Opin-
ion about Homosexu-
ality, received the
2018 ACJS Interna-
tional Section Out-
standing Book Award.
With her coauthor,Professor Amy Adamczyk was recent-ly awarded the Best Paper Award for 2016from the Journal of Management, Spiritu-ality, and Religion.
See more of Professor Adamczyk'spublications on the ‘RECENT FACULTY PUBLICATIONS' page in our newsletter.
Professor Amy Adamczyk
Co-authored with John Jay undergraduates, Nicolle Ramirez, Brian Moriarty and Ivan Yeung, Pro-
fessor Pontell gave a presentation at the November 2017 Meetings of the American Society of
Criminology in Philadelphia entitled, “Predictable Corporate Crime Scandals? Poor Corporate Gov-
ernance and Criminogenic Environments at Wells Fargo and Volkswagen.” He also served as a dis-
cussant at an Author Meets Critics Session on Greg Barak’s award-winning book, Unchecked Corpo-
rate Power: Why the Crimes of Multinational Corporations Are Routinized Away and What We
Can Do About It (Routledge, 2017).
Last spring he gave an invited lecture to over 100 students and faculty at the Department of Sociolo-
gy of the University of Macau entitled, “Casinos and Economic Crime: The Paradox of Enforcement.”
Professor Henry Pontell
Casinos and Economic Crime: The Paradox of Enforcement
Henry Pontell
Distinguished Professor
John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Date: 13th April 2017
Time: 11:30am—12:45pm
Venue: E21-G016
Abstract:
Notwithstanding the results of some empirical studies, casinos and gambling are widely considered to be breeding grounds for a range of deviant behavior and crimi-nal offenses. The casino industry in Macau, by far the largest in the world, offers a unique opportunity to examine issues of economic crime. Using the literature on white-collar crime from criminology, and casino regulation from sociology, this presentation highlights major issues regarding the methods of control of the gambling industry and the paradoxes of enforcement that face the policing of white-collar and corporate crimes. The paradox arises from the central sociological insight by Skolnick (1978) that two positions need to be reconciled in the regulation of the casino industry. The first is that the criminal law be employed to enjoin conduct that some find pleas-urable and some think repugnant. The second concerns the more generic question of the limits that ought to be employed to regulate different kinds of enterprises. Case studies are examined that illustrate both this central debate, and the resulting para-doxes that face enforcement of major economic crimes.
Assistant Professor Ritchie
Savage, recently published
Populist Discourse in Ven-
ezuela and the United
States: American Unex-
ceptionalism and Political
Identity Formation
(Palgrave Macmillan, 2018). In
early March, he was invited to
participate in an invited Har-
vard University workshop,
"Populism in the Americas,"
sponsored by the David Rocke-
feller Center for Latin American
Studies (DRCLAS). He was also
invited to participate on the
panel, "Affecting the Political,"
at the American Ethnological
Society/Section of Visual An-
thropology (AES/SVA) Joint
Conference, held in Philadelphia
on March 22-24.
Professor Ritchie Savage
In her spare time, Professor Andrea Siegel
curates an inner city art collection, where
she's permanently installed over 600 works
in thematic groupings throughout the 14
campus buildings of Hudson County Com-
munity College in Jersey City. Due to a mas-
sive influx of recent art donations
(including our first Picasso), the collection
now contains over 1000 works (the remain-
ing 400 or so are slated for installation in
the next few months). When Andrea started
on the job— about the same time she started
at John Jay —the collection included 25 in-
stalled works. If you'd like a tour, please let
Andrea know. She's happy to show what can
be done to turn an inner city college into an
educational art museum, including a gallery
of fine art about the African diaspora, art
about Social Justice and Totalitarianism
since 1945, contemporary Hispanic Ameri-
can art, Feminist Art, etc. Go to https://
www.hccc.edu/foundationartcollection/ for
more information.
Professor Andrea Siegel
Professors Kwan-Lamar Blount & Victor St. John
“Kwan-Lamar Blount-
Hill and Victor J. St. John
are recipients of the 2017
American Society of
Criminology ‘s Division of
Critical Criminology and
Social Justice Best Jour-
nal Article Award ti-
tled “Manufactured Mis-
match: Cultural Incon-
gruence and Black Expe-
rience in the Academy,” a
qualitative exploration of the Black experi-
ence in Criminal Justice doctoral programs
in the U.S. Blount-
Hill and St. John
utilize critical race
theory to focus on
the issues sur-
rounding the un-
derrepresentation
of racial minorities
in higher education,
the barriers that
contribute to this,
and provide in-
sights on how to ameliorate the situation.
Sociology Department Student Advising
The Department offers several options to students who have questions about criminology, sociology, or dispute resolution.
1. The Department of Sociology Advising website is home to major and mi-nor worksheets for students, advising videos, and a Student Ad-vising Guide with answers to most questions: www.jjay.cuny.edu/student-advisement-0
2. Students can email [email protected] with further questions.
3. Appointments with a faculty advisor can be made using AdvisorTrachttps://jjcadvisortrac.jjay.cuny.edu
- Amy Adamczyk, Joshua.D. Freilich, and
Chunrye Kim (Ph.D. student) 2017. “Religion
and Crime: A Systematic Review and Assess-
ment of Next Steps.” Sociology of Religion. 78:
192-232.
- Gary LaFree and Amy Adamczyk. 2017.
“The Impact of the Boston Marathon Bombing
on Public Willingness to Cooperate with Po-
lice.” Justice Quarterly 34: 459-490.
- Amy Adamczyk, Chunrye Kim (Ph.D. stu-
dent) and Maggie Schmuhl (Ph.D. student) (in
press). “Newspaper Presentations of Homosex-
uality across Nations: Examining Differences by
Religion, Economic Development, and Democ-
racy.” Sociological Perspectives.
Jacob Felson and Amy Adamczyk. (in press)
“Effects of Geography on Mental Health Dispar-
ities on Sexual Minorities in New York City."
Archives of Sexual Behavior.
-Adam Kavon Ghazi-Tehrani, Bryan Burton and
Henry N. Pontell, “Deviant Executives:
Crime in the Suites,” in Steve Brown and Ophir
Sefiha (eds.) Routledge Handbook of Deviance.
NY: Routledge Publishers, Taylor and Francis,
(2017).
-Adam Kavon Ghazi-Tehrani, Lindsey K. Wil-
liams, Yujing Fun, and Henry N. Pontell,
“State Legitimacy and Government Crime: The
China-Japan Rare Earth Element Case.”
Critical Issues in Justice and Politics 10:1
(August 2017): 4-14.
Henry N. Pontell, Adam Kavon Ghazi-
Tehrani and Theresa Chang, “Economic Crime
and China’s High Speed Railway: A Case Study
of the Wenzhou Crash.” Asian Journal of
Criminology 12:1 (2017) 1-22.
- Maria Volpe and M. Johnson summer
2017. “The Color of Money: Compensation
Opportunities and Barriers” Dispute Resolu-
tion Magazine, Vol 23, No 4.
- Maria Volpe and Syeda Alom 2017, The
Voices of Urban Muslims in New York City.
Preface and Co-Editor [with S. Alom]. CUNY
Dispute Resolution Center.
-Maria Volpe, J. Cambria, H. McGowan, C.
Honeyman 2017. “Negotiating with the Un-
known” in The Negotiator’s Desk Reference,
(Vol. 2.) edited by A. K. Schneider and C.
Honeyman, St Paul, Mn.: DRI Press, 2017.
-Maria Volpe September 2017. Cultivating
Ongoing Public Discourse: A College Com-
munity’s Experience. ACResolution 15:4.
-Maria Volpe Aug 2017. Conflict Resolution
and Mediation Workshop, Center for Em-
ployment Opportunities.
-Maria Volpe with Dan Berstein of MH Me-
diate Aug 2017. Basic Mediation Skills Train-
ing for Peer Specialists, AAA-ICDR Founda-
tion, John Jay College.
-Kwan-Lamar Blount-Hill and Victor J.
St.John “Manufactured Mismatch”: Cultur-
al Incongruence and Black Experience in the
Academy.” Race and Justice 7:2 (2017) 110-
126.
Ritchie Savage, Populist Discourse in Ven-
ezuela and the United States: American
Unexceptionalism and Political Identity For-
mation (Palgrave Macmillan, 2018).
Recent Faculty Publications
Robert H. Tillman, Henry N. Pontell and
William K. Black, Financial Crime and Crises in the Era of False Profits. NY: Oxford
University Press (2017).
The 2018 Ceremony Will be Held on Tuesday April 24, 2018
2017
Shalena Ali
Oluwatobi Adeleke
Ashley Baxter
Samantha Bibbo
Marsha -Ann Boyea
Arlette Campbell
Henry Chilton
Erika Coello
Marco Collemi
Mary Dedivanaj
Lisandra De Fraga
Anjelica D’Emilio
Ana De Melo
Melissa Despot
Michelle DiLiberto
Amanda Dookee-
ram Katiria Florez
Alvin Gangaram
Heidy Garcia
Katherine Garcia
Cydney Gentile
Nina Gorgoglione
Alexis Huezo
Cindy Huitzil
Francisco Jimenez
Ambiea Khaten
Alexsandra Lema
Natasha Lewis
Elizabeth Luder
Tamiko Massey
Johana Martinez
Gregory Mogollon
Natasha Muthu-
viran Aaron Negron
Mike Palaguachi
Nefer Pelaez
Emilie Quiñones
Madeline Rodri-
quez Cesar Ruiz
Jordan Sanchez
Samantha Schenkel
Ashley Stewart
Kelvin Tejada
Jampal Tsering
Thalia Valdovinos
Priscilla Vidal
Denice Vidals
Melinda Yam
2018
Carolina Acon
Ashley Aversano
Jennifer Cadeau
Sabrina Calderon
Kalilla Dilgen
Christopher Gaidis
Daniell Gomez
Joselina Rodriguez
Mabel Rosario
Yanela Tineo
Yildaliz Abreu
Shakhrizat Ab-
dulaeva
LaToya Alexander
Kelseey Anzures-
Licona
Gavriella Arias
Shyanna Constantino
Mary Famuyide
Genesis Gonzalez
Teresa Guidice
Melanie Hinck
Hye Won Jeon
Navoda Katukurunde
Alexandra Leon
Brianna Lightbourne
Ryan Lynch
Maria José Martinez
Marlen Martinez
Dayne McDonald
Diana Mendoza
Brian Moriarty
Adrian Orozco
Angely Paulino
Nermin Radonic
Kaina Rosario
Isis Samuels
Brian Smith
Amanda Toto
Elizabeth Veilleux
I n 2017 the Sociology Department founded a chapter of The International Sociology
Honor Society, Alpha Kappa Delta at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. To be
Eligible to join, students must be an officially declared Sociology or Criminology major, be at
least a junior, have a cumulative GPA of 3.3 or better, have maintained a 3.0 or better aver-
age across all SOC classes, and have completed at least 4 SOC courses at John Jay College.
2017 and 2018 Alpha Kappa Delta International
Sociology Honor Society Inductees
2017 Alpha Kappa Delta Inductees
T his Ceremony recognizes the exceptional dedication and accomplishments in teaching and mentoring by our adjunct faculty. We honor the adjunct faculty
whom the Sociology Department heavily relies on to teach our classes, and celebrate our students who have shown excellence in service and research.
Faculty Teaching Excellence
Awards
Eileen Clancy
James Ditucci-Capppiello
Marquita James
Brian Maule
Diana Rodriguez-Spajia
Ritchie Savage
Student Research Excellence Award
For exceptional research by current seniors majoring in
criminology or sociology
Melissa Despot
Angela Mavrou
Samantha Schenkel
Diana Chacon
Faculty Mentoring Awards
Brian Maule
Jan Yager
Jock Young Award
For the best paper in critical
crimi-nology and/or social
activism
Ashante Joseph
Sean Wheeler Award
To the outstanding student in
criminology
Elizabeth Luder
The 2018 Award Ceremony Will be Held on Tuesday, May 15, 2018
2017 Sociology Department Student-Faculty Awards
STUDENT-FACULTY AWARDS CEREMONY
2017 Student-Faculty Award Ceremony
Sociology Talks and Workshops
Sylvie Frignon, Professor of Criminolo-
gy and Social sciences at the University
of Ottawa presented a symposium enti-
tled “The Art of Doing Criminology.”
Professor Jan Yager hosted a student skills building workshop, “Put Time
on Your Side.”
Paul Magin, Ph.D., University of Western Australia, presented “The Regulation of Commercial Sex in Northern Ireland.”
Get to Know Our Students
Mohammed Amid
My goal is to join the
NYPD and to serve the
public. I thank my sociolo-
gy professors for sparking
my appreciation for law
enforcement. One of the
biggest focal points in my
Sociology 203 class was the importance of im-
proving police practices and building relation-
ships between civilians and the police and that
law enforcement runs more smoothly when there
is an established harmony with citizens. The class
taught me that we can resolve and prevent many
crime issues by tackling them from a "social per-
spective" and by working to improve societal con-
ditions for society's most "at-risk" individuals in
order to stifle crime at its roots. We must help
those vulnerable in order to see positive results in
the overall community. I agree, and will be taking
this knowledge with me a few years from now
when I join the police force and work to build this
connection between the community and law en-
forcement.
Elisa Ironova
I had a really great experi-
ence in Sociology 101 with
Professor Manoj. We learned
about race, socialization,
feminism, and hate crimes.
He taught us so enthusiasti-
cally and with great patience.
He made it very informative
and interesting at the same
time. We discussed a lot of topics relating to glob-
al social problems , including hate crimes, rac-
ism, white - collar crimes, resocialization, globali-
zation and mass migration. I think sociology is a
very important subject for understanding our
world, as it examines relationships among
people, communities, society, and nation-
states. Even if you don't fully understand
a language or culture, there are still a lot
of ways sociology helps you to compre-
hend societies, norms, and different life-
styles!
Raymond Hilker
In SOC 341, International Criminology
taught by Professor Patrick Mondaca, stu-
dents study international crime problems
and develop critical thinking about na-
tional and international anti-crime poli-
cies. One particular assignment called up-
on students to write a high-quality analyt-
ical research paper demonstrating a thor-
ough understanding of a crime category.
Raymond’s paper, which analyzed an as-
pect of international crime in the context
of chemical weapons, considers bot hu-
man and environmental impacts and ex-
amines past and present warfare, contem-
porary treaties, and ideas for a future
without such weapons. As the assignment
required, Raymond utilized a range of
sources tracing the first recorded ancient
use of chemical weapons from the Atheni-
ans siege of Kirrha in 600 BC where he
recounts the poisoning of the city’s water
supply with the herb hellebore, to WWI,
WWII, up to the present conflict in Syria.
Raymond’s paper was featured in a recent
issue of John Jay’s Finest.
2018 Roger H. Davis Scholarship Recipient
Rebekah Love
Africana and Gender Studies major
Rebekah Love, the second recipient
of the Roger H. Davis Scholarship,
with Sociology Department Chair
Henry Pontell at the 2018 Champi-
ons of Justice Reception.
The Roger H. Davis Scholarship, the first LGBTQ endowed scholarship at John Jay, carries a $1000 per year award for LGBTQ research and/or activism, and is named in memory of Stonewall Inn Rebellion participant and activist, Roger H. Davis. It was created in the Sociology Department and funded by the Davis and Pontell families.
President Karol V. Mason and Interim-Provost Anne Lopes Visiting With Our Faculty
WHOM TO CONTACT ADMINISTRATIVE SPECIALIST Alisa Thomas 212.887.6123 [email protected] 520.01 HH
DEPARTMENT SECRETARY Theresa Rockett 212.237.8666 [email protected] 520.02 HH
DEPARTMENT CHAIR Henry N. Pontell 212.887.6122 [email protected] 520.27 HH
DEPARTMENT DEPUTY CHAIR David Green 646.557.4641 [email protected] 520.25HH
MAJOR ADVISORS Robert Garot 212.237.8680 [email protected] 520.34 HH
Antonio (Jay) Pastrana 212-237-8665 [email protected] 520.06HH
Janice Johnson-Dias 212-484-1310 [email protected] 520.29HH
WHOM TO CONTACT SOCIOLOGY BA Major Coordinator Robert Garot 212-237-8680 [email protected] 520.34 HH
CRIMINOLOGY BA Major Coordinator
Barry Spunt 212-237-8677 [email protected] 520.20 HH
DISPUTE RESOLUTION CERTIFICATE AND MINOR
Coordinator and Advisor Maria Volpe 212.237.8692 [email protected] 520.40 HH
CUNY DISPUTE RESOLUTION CENTER Maria Volpe 212.237.8692 [email protected] 520.40 HH